The Quiet Architecture
A First Person, Phenomenological Account of a HIGH IQ Mind I have always lived with the sense that my mind is a room with more windows than most people’s. Light comes in from angles others don’t seem to notice. Shadows, too. I don’t say this with pride or with shame; it is simply the architecture I inhabit. From childhood onward, I felt the world not only as a place to move through but as a puzzle to interpret, a symphony to decode, a question that never stopped unfolding. I thought more, perceived more, and felt differently than the people around me, and for a long time I believed this difference was a flaw — a kind of spiritual over-sensitivity, a misalignment with the rhythm of ordinary life. Growing up with a mind that refuses to stay on the surface is a strange experience. The world around me seemed to operate on a frequency I could hear but not quite match. People spoke in straightforward lines, while my thoughts moved in spirals. They seemed content with answers, while I was ...